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Chapter 29
krupt; and as  rico give tunes, t provide for ttle at o stay a fe of t ton, and all t. to t nor "t know wed.

    ask of gooseberry picking, I asked her were now.

    "Gone over to Morton for a  to tea."

    turned ime ted tered by tc. Joopped: Mary, in a fe in seeing me o come doook my  me.

    "You sed for my leave to descend," sill look very pale -- and so thin! Poor child! -- poor girl!"

    Diana oned, to my ear, like ted to encounter. o me full of cenance elligent -- ures equally pretty; but le, more distant. Diana looked and spoke ain auty: sly. It ure to feel pleasure in yielding to an auty supported like o bend, ted, to an active will.

    "And  is not your place. Mary and I sit in tcimes, because at o be free, even to license -- but you are a visitor, and must go into the parlour."

    "I am very well here."

    "Not at all, ling about and covering you h flour."

    "Besides, too  for you," interposed Mary.

    "to be sure," added er. "Come, you must be obedient." And still o the inner room.

    "Sit take our t tea ready; it is anottle moorland o prepare our own meals when we are so inclined, or when hannah is baking, brewing, washing, or ironing."

    S. Jo opposite, a book or nes occupant.

    t comfortable, because clean and neat. t, and t-able range, antique portraits of ted tained ained some books and an ancient set of c in t
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